This collection of stimulating essays focuses on issues of gender and sexuality in Irish history, biography, language, literature, and drama. While the contributors employ a variety of methodological and critical perspectives, they share the conviction that the gendering of Ireland--not only of the nation, but of actual Irish men and women--is a construction of culture and ideology and not simply one of nature.
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Anthony Bradley is professor of English at the University of Vermont.
Maryann Gialanella Valiulis is director of the Centre for Women's Studies at Trinity College in Dublin.
In this timely and provocative collection, critical debates about desire and its discontents have at last caught up with the rapidly changing experience of gender and sexuality in modern Ireland. Both historically grounded and theoretically sophisticated, the essays draw on a wide range of disciplines and intellectual positions which challenge traditional and revisionist stereotypes alike. The originality of the work not only breaks new ground in Irish studies, but also makes a major contribution to the expanding literature on gender, place, and nation in recent post-colonial studies.
(Luke Gibbons, Author of Transformations in Irish Culture)"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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